What is this thing anyway?

This website documents, in great depth, a large collection of chemical elements and examples of their
applications, common and uncommon. Click any element tile above and you will find probably more than
you ever wanted to know about that element. All these samples (well, at least the ones that fit) are
stored in a wooden periodic table, by which I mean a physical table you can actually sit at, in my
office at Wolfram Research.

Then I started building a website to document all my samples, and that's when things really got out
of hand. A few months later my little table won the 2002 Ig Nobel Prize in Chemistry,
clearly the highest honor for which it is eligible.

Sensing an audience, I began to take the website more seriously, which led to my
being asked to write a monthly column for Popular Science magazine,
which I've now been doing continuously since the July 2003 issue.

Later I formed a most satisfying partnership with Max Whitby building high-end
museum displays, selling element samples and sets,
and filming video demonstrations of the chemical properties of the elements.

This website now contains the largest, most complete library of stock photographs of the elements and their applications available
anywhere, as well as a large and growing collection of 3D images documenting hundreds of samples rotated through 360 degrees.
Try clicking on some elements in the table above: I think you'll be surprised what's lurking behind those little tiles.

And if you like the pictures, you'll love the poster! After years of photography and months of assembling images,
I published a photographic periodic table poster based on my collection: